10 Best Places to Visit in January | Travel Video

Travelers searching for something interesting to do in January will find a number of fantastic and interesting festivals that occur throughout the world during the first month of the year. January is also traditionally a great time of the year for bargains in the travel industry. So travelers can often attend unique cultural festivals or visit lovely destinations in January without breaking their banks.

10. Carnaval de Negros y Blancos, Pasto

9. Australia Day

8. Rideau Canal Skateway, Ottawa

7. Lerwick Shetland Islands, Up Helly Aa
Up Helly Aa is a celebration of fire and of Nordic tradition in the remote Shetland Islands in which hundreds of costumed participants march through the streets with torches on the last Tuesday in January.

6. Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve
The annual Monarch butterfly migration is one of nature’s great spectacles and a top attraction for visitors to Mexico’s central highlands. Each year, millions of Monarch Butterflies make the journey from eastern Canada to the forests of western central Mexico, a journey that spans up to 3,000 miles. The Monarch butterflies spend their winter hibernation clustered in small areas of the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve in Michoacan, before they travel to the north again. January and February are popular months to visit the reserve, because the Monarch population is at a peak at this time.

5. IceHotel
The Icehotel in the tiny village of Jukkasjärvi in northern Sweden, provides it guests with an unique experience. Each year from December to April, an entire hotel is made out of snow and ice, including the chairs and beds in the guest rooms. Even the glasses in the bar are made of ice! Guests sleep in polar-tested sleeping bags. There’s no plumbing at the hotel, but bathrooms for guests are found in a warm building close by and there is also a sauna on the premises. A whole host of optional activities such as snowmobiling and husky sledding complete an unforgettable trip.

4. Park City Utah, Sundance Film Festival
The Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, which was co-founded by Robert Redford in 1978, began as a low-key showcase for American independent movies and as a way to attract filmmakers to the State of Utah. It has now morphed into a star-studded event that attracts celebrities and media from around the world. In fact, the Sundance Film Festival, which is the largest in the United States, has now become the place to see and be seen in the United States during the month of January. In addition, there is more to do at the Sundance Festival than just viewing new movies. Park City is also home to three ski resorts, and because everybody is going to movies, snow-seekers might feel they have the slopes all to themselves.

3. Cebu City Sinulog Festival
The annual Sinulog Festival in Cebu City, which bills itself as a “Celebration of Faith and Heritage,” is a nine-day-long celebration which ends with the spectacular Sinulog Grand Parade. During this parade, participants dress in brightly colored costumes and dance the Sinulog to the sound of drums. For those unfamiliar with the Sinulog, it is a dance where participants take two steps forward, then one step backwards as they move down the street. This is a very long parade that can last between nine and twelve hours. The Sinulog Festival begins on the third Sunday of January and is held in honor of the Santo Nino, which is a statue of Jesus as a child that is considered to be the oldest religious image in the Philippines.

2. Tromso International Film Festival
Featuring more than 300 screenings, the Tromso is the largest film festival in Norway. In addition, because the city of Tromso is located in the Arctic Circle, it is also the northernmost international film festival in the world. The Tromso Film Festival boasts seven screens, including a big outdoor one that is set up in the city’s main square for viewers who don’t mind a little chilly weather with their movies. Film festival goers also have a good chance of viewing the spectacular beauty of the Northern Lights during their stay in Tromso, which is located in a prime viewing zone for these natural works of art.

1. Harbin Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival
The Harbin Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival is a month-long festival in Harbin in Northeast China, where visitors are treated to the sight of amazing works of art and even buildings sculpted out of either ice or snow. While these icy works of art are beautiful in the daylight, they are even more stunning at night when they are set aglow with colorful LED lights. In addition, each year the ice artists work to recreate famous landmarks and artworks from around the world, such as the Egyptian pyramids. The Harbin festival is now the largest ice and snow sculpture event in the world.

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